I don’t think humanity is going to continue to agree to what is government approved torturing of people who have already undergone trauma. I don’t think humanity wants to be inhumane. So eventually those people who have altered states of consciousness and unusual sensory experiences won’t be subjected to a forced psychiatric regime, by the fearful public, who if they were better would never approve of such things as ECT and forced drugging.

We don't want distressed young people strapped down on
stretchers/ beds while psychiatrists get paid to tell nurses to stick pricks in
the young person. We don't want that happening to adults either. But it happens
all the time.

It's strange that
the public doesn't recognise strapping a person down in a stretcher, forced
drugging and electrocution as abuse, when it's done by a psychiatrist's assistants.

That even though
psychiatric abuse occurs so more often than other forms of ‘human trafficking’, it is not even
considered as the cause of a distressed state. Such denial of reality the world
has. That denial means a person tries other symbols to communicate the suffering that is denied. These symbols get diagnosed, instead of understood. A person's communication then is really violated. Literally gagged? Well, they don't tend to use literal gags, the white rag around the mouth killed too many and looked obviously violent.

It's strange that
Australia still doesn't recognise that forced drugging is a horrific crime,
accept in their signing of the UN CRPD ratification. Recognise if you are in the
medical profession and ever do forcefully drug a person, you can be taken to
court and if you are not convicted in Australian courts, you will be in the
International Court. Psychiatric abuse is not okay, it never was.

the
United Nation's CRPD ratification Australia has recently signed:

'Article
14 - Liberty and security of the person

1. States
Parties shall ensure that persons with disabilities, on an equal basis with
others:

(a) Enjoy
the right to liberty and security of person;

(b) Are
not deprived of their liberty unlawfully or arbitrarily, and that any
deprivation of liberty is in conformity with the law, and that the existence of
a disability shall in no case justify a deprivation of liberty.

2. States
Parties shall ensure that if persons with disabilities are deprived of their
liberty through any process, they are, on an equal basis with others, entitled
to guarantees in accordance with international human rights law and shall be
treated in compliance with the objectives and principles of this Convention,
including by provision of reasonable accommodation.

1. No one
shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment. In particular, no one shall be subjected without his or her free
consent to medical or scientific experimentation.

2. States
Parties shall take all effective legislative, administrative, judicial or other
measures to prevent persons with disabilities, on an equal basis with others,
from being subjected to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment.'